use the white side gives a nice durable reasonably cheap reflective floor surface

just thought i'd share in case anyone else has been hunting for something like this

At $30 a tile, it will still be a lot more expensive than tileboard is in the USA. I haven't even looked at the price of perspex sheets, I think that will be a worse shock.

We have the added problem of having converted a carpeted room into a studio - so my first challenge is creating a hard floor. Right now, ripping up the carpet and replacing it isn't in the budget....

i would just get some 25mm MDF sheets and lay them down maybe run some timber battons on top of the carpet first to leave an air gap to stop it going mouldy then you can nail the MDF sheets to the battonsit can be quite easily full removed then

I know $30 is more than the yanks pay for tile board but this is the closest stuff i found that can be easily aquired locally it is good and durable too

Thanks for the link to the tutorial. Awesome info, as I've been trying to figure out how to emulate that white background effect for my product shots. I need to pick up some of that tile board. I just hope I can fit the 4x8 foot sheets in my van

I had to take some product shots of several engines recently, and since these suckers weigh 400-600 pounds each, you can't exactly transport them into a studio. I shot them in the shop using a big ass reflector as the backdrop, and the results sucked balls. I never want to spend that much time in photoshop again, so I'm eager to try out some tile board along with some rolls of paper.

That is an awesome link -- thanks for posting it! I'll be shooting some artwork against white seamless in the coming weeks, and I've been dreading it a bit...but the simple addition of some of those folding doors should take out all the dread. I haven't decided yet if I want the glossy reflection of the tile board for this particular shoot, but it's cheap enough here in the States that I'll have to give it a try.

I'd love a Ute, but they haven't made them here in America for nearly 30 years

So then whats the difference with that and a pickup truck?

Utes are based on car chassis. Back in the day, the Chevy El Camino....

....was merely a Chevelle with a bed instead of a trunk and backseats.

Thanks, Google image search

So basically, you could have the same big-block V-8, manual trans, suspension, and brakes as a Chevelle passenger car but with the versatility of a small pickup truck.

These days, the Aussies cars like the Holden Ute, that comes with the same 400hp, 6.0L V-8 and six-speed manual trans as in the 2005-2008 Corvette. Those bastards

Ah fair enough. I am an aussie and love utes. Though not so much the shiny ones, give me a dusty, roughly handled tradies ute anyday of the week. Convenient for everything. Oh so by the way, please bring some tileboard over for me too, in your carry on ofcourse.

i would just get some 25mm MDF sheets and lay them down maybe run some timber battons on top of the carpet first to leave an air gap to stop it going mouldy then you can nail the MDF sheets to the battonsit can be quite easily full removed then

I know $30 is more than the yanks pay for tile board but this is the closest stuff i found that can be easily aquired locally it is good and durable too

We decided to bite the bullet and rip up the carpet. Given the price of thick MDF sheets, laying down MDF on top of the carpet would have approached half the cost of reflooring the entire room with laminate.